Results 21 to 30 of about 11,936 (205)
Notes on three Proto-Slavic borrowings
The Proto-Slavic etyma *dъska, *misa, and *bļudo (*bļudъ), which are semantically related, are generally regarded as borrowings, but there is no consensus on the exact origins of these nouns. Following surveys of the Old Church Slavic and Gothic evidence
Rick Derksen
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The main purpose of the scientific article is to consider the status of morphonology and its problems on the basis of the morphonology of the Proto-Slavic language. The goal is also set for further in-depth research of morphonology - a preliminary reconstruction of the vocabulary of the proto-language on the basis of a comparative etymological study of
openaire +1 more source
On reconstructing Proto-Bantu grammar
This book is about reconstructing the grammar of Proto-Bantu, the ancestral language at the origin of current-day Bantu languages. While Bantu is a low-level branch of Niger-Congo, the world’s biggest phylum, it is still Africa’s biggest language family.
Güldemann, Tom +18 more
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Formal approaches to number in Slavic and beyond
The goal of this collective monograph is to explore the relationship between the cognitive notion of number and various grammatical devices expressing this concept in natural language with a special focus on Slavic.
Grimm, Scott +29 more
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Germanic-Slavic Hybrid Names in the East German Toponymy [PDF]
The article focuses on the toponymy of the Eastern part of modern Germany where Slavic and Germanic tribes were in contact during several centuries: in the 7th century the Slavs ousted Germanic tribes from this territory; then, since the early 10th ...
Karlheinz Hengst
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Русский след в некоторых удмуртских словах: о происхождении лексем вай, ӝожон, зол, нет, туж [Russian Trace in Some Udmurt Words: on the Origin of the Lexemes вай, ӝожон, зол, нет, and туж] [PDF]
Russian borrowed vocabulary in Udmurt is well studied. A series of articles is devoted to this scientific topic, two doctoral dissertations have been defended, books and monographs were published.
Sergey Maksimov
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The Proto-Slavic Word for Lungs: *pluťa or *pľuťa?
Although the Proto-Slavic word for lungs can be reliably reconstructed as *pluťa (n. pl.) or *pľuťa (n. pl.), it remains unclear how these two forms are related to each other.
Mikhail Saenko
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Sleep‐trackers in the wild: A faceted taxonomy for information and interaction design
Abstract Consumer‐grade sleep‐tracking technologies (CSTs) have brought sleep into everyday data practices, reframing it from a clinical concern into a site of personal optimization and reflection. Yet existing taxonomies of sleep‐tracking often medicalize users and overlook the complexity of sleep‐tracking technologies. This paper presents SleepTax, a
Sanonda Datta Gupta +2 more
wiley +1 more source
In the recent years the employees of the Research Center for Areal Linguistics at the Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts have been working on a new approach for the description of the word formation system in the Macedonian language.
Davor Jankuloski
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The article is devoted to the diachronic description of genetically close vocabulary of the East Slavic languages on the basis of the study of its origin and semantics in the context of the urgent problems of historical derivatology, lexicology and ...
Nataliya V. Pyataeva
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